Making another KuK infantry saber - my skills have improved a lot since back then....

Moderator: Beowulf
If it was personal property, I don't see why it would not be turned over to the heirs with his sea chest.LaCroix wrote: 2018-04-20 07:02am I like to think the user survived - did they sent their blade back home to the family when an officer died? I don't think so. Maybe it was an important battle, so he kept it as a memento, or he just took it back home, hoping to repair, and it would have cost more than a new one (or the fashion had changed, so he had to keep up), and he just gave it to a kid as a toy while getting himself a new one.
Why?U.P. Cinnabar wrote: 2018-04-21 03:22pm I'd have thought he'd been buried with it, if he'd been KIA.
You are right, that makes sense - an officer's belongings would be returned, and his blade would be easy to identify amongst the others lying nearby. I was wondering wether it would have been included in his last finery when he would be buried at sea or not. In hindsight, armed burial has come out of style since the high middle ages, so yes - why would they do it now.Thanas wrote: 2018-04-21 03:18pmIf it was personal property, I don't see why it would not be turned over to the heirs with his sea chest.LaCroix wrote: 2018-04-20 07:02am I like to think the user survived - did they sent their blade back home to the family when an officer died? I don't think so. Maybe it was an important battle, so he kept it as a memento, or he just took it back home, hoping to repair, and it would have cost more than a new one (or the fashion had changed, so he had to keep up), and he just gave it to a kid as a toy while getting himself a new one.